Who would have thought that in this, the year of our lord Two Thousand and Twenty Six, I'd be purchasing a pack of brand new cassette tapes.
The eagle-eyed among you might notice that these are Type I tapes and not the High-Bias Type II tapes that this 4-track recorder is designed to use. You see, this is deliberate: not only are the Type I tapes much cheaper, and thus less worrisome to mess around with, but the fact that they're the incorrect tape means that they'll have much more distortion than the correct Type II tapes.
And giving things a quick test, the audio I recored to this tape, when played back, sounds... really, really good. Like I've got some proper nice headphones and I can't hear a bit of distortion, hiss or really anything but the exact same audio pouring back into my ears that I recorded onto it.
That might sound like a good thing, but 90% of the point of buying this 4-track was to take advantage of its character and colouring of the audio, and if it's reproducing the input nearly perfectly then it's not exactly adding a whole lot of colour.
But all is not lost, there are techniques that can be employed to increase the distortion and noise levels. Turning off the dbx system, slowing the tape to 4.8 cm/s instead of the 9.5 cm/s setting, and messing up the gain staging and recording levels will do a lot to make the sound properly crunchy. And, honestly, being able to scale things down from a starting point of "almost CD quality" means I'll have lots of range to dial things in to my liking.
I do also have a Type II cassette on its way, which is about 3.5x the price of these Type I cassettes, so it'll be interesting to see if it responds differently to being driven into distortion.
I am kind of impressed, though. Having only experienced cassette tape through basic car head units, cheap walkman knock-offs, and bargain basement radio cassette players, I never really had the chance to experience the full quality that cassette tape could deliver.
































